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Yugoslavia 1932 (K) Gold Dukat Alexander I Countermark Ear of Corn NGC MS62 Rare
Yugoslavia 1932 (K) Gold Dukat Alexander I Countermark Ear of Corn NGC MS62 Rare
Yugoslavia 1932 (K) Gold Dukat Alexander I Countermark Ear of Corn NGC MS62 Rare
Yugoslavia 1932 (K) Gold Dukat Alexander I Countermark Ear of Corn NGC MS62 Rare
Yugoslavia 1932 (K) Gold Dukat Alexander I Countermark Ear of Corn NGC MS62 Rare
Yugoslavia 1932 (K) Gold Dukat Alexander I Countermark Ear of Corn NGC MS62 Rare
Yugoslavia 1932 (K) Gold Dukat Alexander I Countermark Ear of Corn NGC MS62 Rare
Yugoslavia 1932 (K) Gold Dukat Alexander I Countermark Ear of Corn NGC MS62 Rare

Yugoslavia 1932 (K) Gold Dukat Alexander I Countermark Ear of Corn NGC MS62 Rare

$985.00

Coin Information:

Date/Info:   1932

Denomination: Dukat

Authenticity is certified by Numismatic Guaranty Corporation NGC

Hight graded for such old Coin as:      MS 62

Composition: Gold

Fineness: 0.9860

Weight: 3.4900g

AGW: 0.1106oz

Obverse: Head left, small legend. below head

Obverse Designer: Richard Plecht

Reverse: Crowned double eagle with shield on breast

Reverse Designer: Joseph Prinz

Edge Description: Milled

Countermark: Ear of corn (rotated to the left))

Ruler: Alexander I

Catalog KM#12.1 - Rare

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The Dinar was the currency of the three Yugoslav states: the Kingdom of Yugoslavia (formerly the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes), the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia and the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia between 1918 and 2003. The dinar was subdivided into 100 para. In the early 1990s, there was severe and prolonged hyperinflation due to a combination of economic mismanagement and criminality. Massive amounts of money were printed; coins became redundant; inflation rates reached the equivalent of 8.51×1029% per year. The highest denomination banknote was 500 billion dinars; it was worthless two weeks after it was printed. This hyperinflation caused five revaluations between 1990 and 1994; in total there were eight distinct dinari. Six of the eight have been given distinguishing names and separate ISO 4217 codes.